Alabama Governor Apologizes for Wearing Blackface in College

Alabama Governor Kay Ivey speaks at a March 4, 2019, news conference in Beauregard, Ala. Ivey is apologizing after a radio interview described her wearing blackface during a college skit in the 1960s. (AP Photo/Vasha Hunt, File)

Ivey, 74, issued the apology after a 1967 radio interview surfaced in which her now-ex-husband describes her actions at Auburn University, where she was vice president of the student government association.

“I offer my heartfelt apologies for the pain and embarrassment this causes, and I will do all I can — going forward — to help show the nation that the Alabama of today is a far cry from the Alabama of the 1960s,” Ivey said.

Ivey released a recording of the college radio interview she and then-fiance Ben LaRavia gave. In the interview, LaRavia describes Ivey as wearing coveralls and “black paint all over her face” while pretending to search for used cigars on the ground in a skit at the Baptist Student Union party. The skit was called “Cigar Butts.” No other details of the skit were given.

Ivey and LaRavia were married for a short time and later divorced.

Ivey said Thursday that she did not remember the skit, but “will not deny what is the obvious.”

“As such, I fully acknowledge — with genuine remorse — my participation in a skit like that back when I was a senior in college.”

“While some may attempt to excuse this as acceptable behavior for a college student during the mid-1960s, that is not who I am today, and it is not what my Administration represents all these years later.”

Ivey’s press secretary, Gina Maiola, said Auburn University brought the recording to the attention of the governor’s office, which decided to release it publicly. University officials discovered the interview while working on a project to digitize and archive old university records, Maiola said.

Ivey is the latest politician to face scrutiny over wearing blackface decades ago.

A racist photo in the medical school yearbook of Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam led to calls for his resignation. Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring also acknowledged wearing blackface in college.

The Alabama NAACP issued a statement calling for Ivey’s resignation, saying her apology “does not erase the fact that she participated in these activities that mocked and intimidated African Americans.”

“It may have been 52 years ago when the skit happened, but it apparently still shapes who she is today,” Benard Simelton president of the Alabama NAACP said in a statement. The statement noted some of Ivey’s actions as governor, including signing into law legislation that protected Confederate and any other longstanding monuments from being torn down.

U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, the only African American member of Alabama’s congressional delegation, said “Ivey’s actions were reprehensible and are deeply offensive.”

“Her words of apology ring hollow if not met with real action to bridge the racial divide,” Sewell said.

Alabama Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton, who is African American, said he appreciated Ivey “owning” the incident and apologizing for it.

“While I think this is something that is disturbing in the African American community, for someone to make a mockery of us and our culture, I appreciate her for at least owning it and coming out publicly with it,” Singleton said. He said Ivey called him Thursday morning to personally apologize. “I said to the governor, ‘I think this is a teachable moment.'”

Asked for comment on the NAACP call for Ivey to resign, Maiola said “the governor’s commitment to serve the state is unchanged and unwavering.”

In February, when The Associated Press asked Ivey about her sorority sisters wearing blackface in her 1967 yearbook, she said she had never worn blackface and didn’t recall ever participating in a racially insensitive event.

Maiola said Thursday that the governor did not remember, and still does not remember, the skit described on the radio.